Mammoth Mountain, California Ski Report
Mammoth Mountain is finishing the 2025–26 ski season with a very Mammoth-style encore: the resort says it is staying open through Sunday, June 7, with cold temperatures, solid coverage, and fresh snow in the forecast helping keep the stoke alive. The official mountain report on June 4 says there are just four days left in the ski and snowboard season, and operations have been trimmed to a morning window from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; the Panorama Gondola is closed for annual maintenance. [4][1] For snow, the numbers are a little split across sources, which is common late in the season when reporting can vary by location on the mountain. OnTheSnow listed a 14-inch base on June 4 with 3 of 25 lifts open, while an earlier FreeSkier report referenced a 76-inch base on March 2 during the heart of the season, along with 179 of 180 trails and 23 of 25 lifts open. [3][2] Mammoth’s own report does not surface a fresh base-depth figure in the snippet provided, but it does confirm the season is in its final stretch. [4] As for recent snowfall, Powder reports that Mammoth is expecting fresh snow this week, and OpenSnow was projecting about 10 inches over five days at the time of that report. The National Weather Service was also expecting mixed precipitation around 8,000 feet, which is right in the zone where Mammoth’s lower mountain lives, so expect the lower slopes to be more “spring storm survival mode” than blower-day fantasy. [1] Weather-wise, the vibe is classic early-June Sierra: cool enough to keep the snow alive, but with enough sun to turn soft fast once the day gets going. Powder’s coverage notes cold temps and fresh snow in the forecast, and Mammoth Snowman describes conditions as starting firm and softening quickly as the day warms up. [1][5] For the five-day outlook, the clearest forecast signal from the sources is continued unsettled weather with a chance of rain and snow near 8,000 feet and roughly 10 inches possible over the five-day period. That points to the best riding likely being earlier in the day, especially on upper mountain terrain where snow quality should hold up longer. [1] On-piste, expect a spring pattern: firmer mornings, then softer, slushier laps as the sun works on the surface. Off-piste, the smart move is to treat anything lower on the mountain as variable and bony, while higher elevations should offer the best remaining snow coverage. That said, late-season Mammoth can still surprise, and the recent forecast suggests the mountain is getting a useful top-up rather than just hanging on by a thread. [1][5] Mammoth’s season total snowfall is best described as still substantial by California standards, though the live total wasn’t directly visible in the freshest snippets. Mammoth’s own historical page says the resort averages about 400 inches in a normal year, and earlier season reporting this winter noted strong accumulation, with one source citing 244 inches by March 2. [7][2] If you are heading up, the key local-style advice is simple: get there early, ski the upper mountain first, and do not expect winter powder conditions everywhere. With closing day near, limited lift operations, and changing weather, Mammoth is serving up a fun final lap rather than a full midwinter buffet. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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